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The Split Attraction Model (SAM) separates romantic attraction or desire for romantic relationships from sexual attraction or desire, thus dividing romantic orientation and sexual orientation into different identities. Terms for sexual orientation have commonly been understood as implying a corresponding romantic orientation;[1] however, a person's romantic and sexual attractions may not exactly align with each other, and people can be attracted to different people in different ways. To convey these differences, split attraction language uses prefixes for the gender or genders a person is oriented toward in relation to themself (such as bi-, queer-, homo-, hetero-), then combines it with a suffix for the attraction type (such as -romantic, -sexual, -sensual).[2]

The asexual community has used such language to communicate differences in romantic and sexual interests, and the types of relationships that may interest them. For instance, asexual people do not feel sexual attraction, but some asexual people have romantic attractions and may use a term for their romantic orientation to express that it differs from their sexual orientation.[1] Someone who experiences differing romantic and sexual orientations are sometimes referred to as varioriented,[3][4] and this experience is known as cross-orientation.[5] Meanwhile, someone whose romantic and sexual orientations are aligned with one another (i.e. they use the same prefix, such as bi or pan) is known as perioriented.[3][6]

Examples[]

Combinations of differing romantic and sexual orientations include the following:

Aroallo[]

Alloaro Flag

The alloaro flag

Aroallo, also known as alloaro, is a general label for people who are both allosexual and on the aromantic spectrum. So then examples of this are combinations such as lesbian and aromantic, and pansexual and demiromantic.[3]

The aroallo/alloaro flag was designed by Tumblr user arotaro on December 27th, 2018.[9] The following are the color meanings for this design:

  • Green: The aromantic community[9]
  • Light green: Lack of attraction[9]
  • White: Diversity of sexuality[9]
  • Light gold: Relationships of all varieties[9]
  • Gold: Inherent wholeness and worth[9]

Alloace[]

AlloaceFlag

The alloace flag

Alloace, also known as alloro ace, is a general label for people who are both alloromantic and on the asexual spectrum. Examples of this include combinations like asexual and gay, and graysexual and biromantic.[3]

The alloace flag was originally designed by Tumblr user Varioriented-Pride on March 1st, 2019. The design is said to be inspired by the alloaro flag.[10] The following are the color meanings for this design:

  • Red and Pink: Romance, specifically chosen since red overall is the complimentary color of green, which in turn is associated with lack of romantic attraction due to the aromantic flag[10]
  • White: Allies or love/relationships[10]
  • Purple: Taken from the asexual flag, meant to represent a general lack of sexual attraction[10]

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Romantic Orientations" by Asexual Visibility and Education Network on The Asexual Visibility and Education Network (Archived on December 4, 2021).
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 "Split Attraction Model (SAM)" by The Trans Language Primer on The Trans Language Primer (Archived on December 8, 2021).
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Ace and Aro Journeys: A Guide to Embracing Your Asexual or Aromantic Identity by The Ace and Aro Advocacy Project. Published 2023 by Jessica Kingsley Publishers. ISBN 9781839976384
  4. "Glossary of Must-Know Sexual Identity Terms" [in en] by Arlin Cuncic on verywellmind.com. Published 2021-07-15 by Verywell Mind. "Varioriented: When a person’s sexual interest and romantic orientation are not aimed at the same gender. For example, a man being romantically attracted to women (heteroromantic) but sexually attracted to both men and women (bisexual)." (Archived on June 1, 2021).
  5. "Here’s What It Means When Your Romantic and Sexual Orientations Are Different" [in en] by Sian Ferguson on everydayfeminism.com. Published 2016-07-01 by Everyday Feminism (Archived on July 5, 2016).
  6. Gen SeXYZ : love, sexuality, & youth by Jeff Grenell. Published 2021 by Whitaker House. ISBN 978-1-64123-587-7
  7. "'Demisexual,' 'biromantic': LGBTQ youth adopting wide array of labels" by Thomas Ilalaole on nbcnews.com. Published 2019-10-03 by NBC News (Archived on December 5, 2022).
  8. "What Does it Mean to be Biromantic?" by Samuel Njoroge on lgbtqandall.com. Published by LGBTQ and All. "A biromantic lesbian is romantically attracted to individuals of different gender groups but is only sexually attracted to women" (Archived on November 25, 2022).
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 "The Ocean is Better Than Romance" by arotaro on arotaro.tumblr.com. Published 2018-12-27 (Archived on February 17, 2019).
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 "Alloace (1)" by Pride-Flags on deviantart.com. Published 2021-12-27 (Archived on July 4, 2023).
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